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The Basic NIUSR Functional Model for WMD Incident Operational Management Bobby Hartway Chair, Requirements Committee NIUSR June 2001.

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Presentation on theme: "The Basic NIUSR Functional Model for WMD Incident Operational Management Bobby Hartway Chair, Requirements Committee NIUSR June 2001."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Basic NIUSR Functional Model for WMD Incident Operational Management Bobby Hartway Chair, Requirements Committee NIUSR June 2001

2 www.niusr.org Please check out the Fall Conference in Huntsville, AL

3 Three Key Ingredients of Requirements Documentation The most import aspects of developing good requirements are... 1) Structure Ideally, structures with scalable, hierarchical, multidimensional, cross-relational attributes... 3) Structure 2) Structure Top-to-bottom Side-to-side Front-to-back Across event-time

4 FEMA’s Federal Response Plan Pyramid Model A 2-D Static Model can’t account for the evolving nature of WMD Incident parameters across time and space. It is a fixed viewpoint of the Emergency Response “System”. 2-D Static Roles Agencies Role Descriptions

5 There are pyramids and there are pyramids Federal State Regional Local What are these levels? - National Hierarchy of Jurisdictional levels or groups Incident – Victims needs & timing Each Jurisdictional Group is Autonomous, and has its own levels of operational functionality Operations – what can be done Law – what may be done Response – what must be done

6 CONCEPT OF COMMAND PROTOCOL LEVELS RESPONDERS VICTIMS-NEEDS EMERG MGMT SYSTEM LEVELS AUTHORITY POLICY LAW RESOURCE COORD CENTRAL OPERATIONS-CMD FIELD OPS CONTROL CONCEPTUAL SYSTEM LEVELS (NGO, Industry, and Medical Community Views Not Shown Here for Simplicity) FEDERAL Agency Authority Federal Response Teams LOCAL Govt Agency Coord EMC C2 Field ICS DoD POLICY and DOCTRINE STRATEGIC CMD TACTICAL CMD FIELD OPS CMD Agency or Service Response Teams FED GOV’T -CIVILIAN FED GOV’T -DoD STATE LAW FED LAW U.S. POLICY Agency-Policy, Service-Doctrine STATE GOV’T FED LAW STATE POLICY STATE Agency Authority STATE Agency Coordination FEDERAL Agency Coordination FEDERAL Field Liaison Fed Field Ofc Field ICS State-Local Response Teams Types of Organizations Notice that all organiztional views span all levels, from law at the top to victims needs at the bottom!

7 FEDERAL GOVERNMENT COORDINATION - “ Federal” Includes Civilian and Military Agencies - FED-CIVIL FED-DoD FEDERAL GOVT COORDINATION AT EVERY LEVEL... SYSTEMLEVELSSYSTEMLEVELS Multiple Federal- Civil Agencies At Each Level Command Coordination ORGANIZATIONAL - OPERATIONAL INCIDENT COORDINATION * Multiple DoD Agencies/Services At Each Level Responder Coordination COORDINATIONCOORDINATION - Within Agency or Service - Between Agencies, Services * For Simplicity the State, Industry, and NGO domains are not shown here Up and Down In Each Organization Across Composite Mgmt Teams for an Incident Across ALL Organizations DIMENSIONS OF COORDINATION

8 CONCEPT OF MULTI-JURISDICTIONAL COORDINATION vs. SCENARIO TYPE & OPERATIONAL PHASE GOVERNMENT INDUSTRY PRIVATE NON-GOVT (NGO) MULTI- JURIDICTIONAL COORDINATION AT EVERY LEVEL SYSTEMLEVELSSYSTEMLEVELS COORDINATIONCOORDINATION Multiple Agencies At Each Level Responder Coordination Command Coordination PreventPlanPrepareRespondRecoverRebuild INCIDENT OPERATIONAL PHASES INCIDENT OPERATIONAL COORDINATION SCENARIO “HEAT” (KNOB) 911 SPILL NATURAL DISASTER CHEMICAL ATTACK ANTHRAX ATTACK EXPLOSIVE ATTACK COMBINATION PLAGUE ATTACK TYPES OF SCENARIOS Incident operational coordination is different for every type of scenario and for each operational phase of a scenario

9 The NIUSR Information-Model for WMD Incident Management The FRP model emphasizes Static, two-dimensional Jurisdictional Ownerships and Responsibilities only.. operational functionality is over- simplified and in narrative form only - no dynamic features!... FRP Model is Inadequate 911 Operations C4 I C5I Respo nse Teams /Cmd Municipal Agencies Concerned Public, Officials, and Media Government Infrastructure Local Care Facilit ies Emergency Management Response / Aid On-Site Response Team Victims & Worried Well Incident Scene (UNKNOWN) 911 call 911 CAD Unified Cmd  Chemical  Nuclear  Energy  Transportatio n Resp onse Tea ms/ Cmd INDUSTRY Industrial EOC County EOC County Agencies State EOC State Agencies Federal EOCs Federal Agencies GDIN/NDIN Int’l Agencies C4 I Industry Management 911 call THR EAT The NIUSR Information Model emphasizes Dynamic information interfaces that support situation-knowledge coordination and a common operational-situational view... The NIUSR Extreme Information Infrastructure (XII) Interoperability Model Provides a Basis for Dynamic WMD Incident Command & Knowledge Management Purple arrows represent flow of incident knowledge using interoperable communications links of all kinds: - telephone, fax, radio, computer

10 Static Models vs. Dynamic Models A Static Model doesn’t account for the evolving nature of WMD Incident across time and space. It is a fixed viewpoint of the Emergency Response “System”. Static A Dynamic model accounts for multiple dimensions across time and space, and through operational organization evolution... including evolving command protocols. WMD Incident Evolution Dynamic

11 Dynamic Model Dimensions  From LOCAL 911 coordination at bottom to International cooperation at top  Across all threats (All-Hazards, including all WMD)  Across all jurisdictions and types of participants from law to medicine  Across all essential elements of information and communication needs  Across all operational phases from analysis, to planning, to training, to exercise, to execution, to resolution  Across all evolutionary changes of command protocols from small incident to catastrophic medical emergency Dynamic WMD Incident Evolution

12 Using XII Model to Show Basic E-911 Emergency Interfaces 911 Operations C4I C5I Response Teams/Cmd Municipal Agencies Concerned Public, Officials, and Media Government Infrastructure Local Care Facilities Emergency Management Response / Aid On-Site Response Team Victims & Worried Well Incident Scene 911 call 911 CAD telco Fire Police Medical SAR Other - Basic Computer-Aided-Dispatch (CAD) for Everyday Incidents - 24/7 operation E-911 “First Responders” Purple arrows represent flow of incident knowledge using interoperable communications links of all kinds: - telephone, fax, radio, computer Wide arrows show flow of response resources and responder teams

13 Modeling The Beginning Phase of a Chemical WMD Incident 911 Operations C4I C5I Response Teams/Cmd Municipal Agencies Concerned Public, Officials, and Media Government Infrastructure Local Care Facilities Emergency Management Response / Aid On-Site Response Team Victims & Worried Well Incident Scene (UNKNOWN) 911 call 911 CAD telco - Example where Everyday Incident Turns out to be a Chemical WMD Event Unfolding - THREAT The true nature of the WMD incident remains unknown until first responders arrive on scene and start assessing the situation. The incident response then escalates stage by stage. The exact nature of the threat remains unkown for some time.

14 Modeling The Later-Beginning of a Chemical WMD Incident 911 Operations C4I C5I Response Teams/Cmd Municipal Agencies Concerned Public, Officials, and Media Government Infrastructure Local Care Facilities Emergency Management Response / Aid On-Site Response Team Victims & Worried Well Incident Scene (some chemical) 911 calls 911 CAD telco Fire Police Medical SAR Hazmat Bomb Squad FBI Other Unified Cmd Extra Command/Control Communications link set up for On-Scene coordination, information gathering, media management, crowd control, etc. - More Responder Teams Are Called In, Situation Unfolding and Expanding - THREAT On-scene Incident Command now requires a Unified Command because of size and makeup of multiple teams The threat agent determined to be chemical but identity, source, and extent still unknown HOT ZONE established and protective gear used -Cell Phones and E-911 may become overloaded and unusable-

15 Response Teams/Cmd Modeling The Middle Stage of a Chemical WMD Incident 911 Operations C4I C5I Response Teams/Cmd Municipal Agencies Concerned Public, Officials, and Media Government Infrastructure Local Care Facilities Emergency Management Response / Aid On-Site Response Team Victims & Worried Well Incident Scene (CHEMICAL WMD) 911 CAD Unified Cmd - Situation Beyond Local Abilities to Handle, Outsiders Called In (by who?) - County EOC County Agencies State EOC State Agencies 911 call THREAT Unified Command and Inter- agency coordination are now much more complicated - not clear who’s in charge of what now The threat agent determined as chemical warfare agent, source ID’d, plume being worked- - population at risk must be alerted, given instructions for safety Multiple levels of EMA- EOC involved, Public and Press must be brought in on situation Many more outside agencies now involved and sending help and needing information Some Medical Care Facilities may become contaminated by victims, or be in path of plume Information sharing at all levels becomes difficult because of communications interoperabilities and especially because of lack of common information formats - - even solving these problems leaves the problem of finding out who has what information telco

16 Response Teams/Cmd Modeling The “Federal” Phase of a Chemical WMD Incident 911 Operations C4I C5I Response Teams/Cmd Municipal Agencies Concerned Public, Officials, and Media Government Infrastructure Local Care Facilities Emergency Management Response / Aid On-Site Response Team Victims & Worried Well Incident Scene 911 CAD Unified Cmd -Situation has Escalated to full-blown Federal WMD Incident- County EOC County Agencies State EOC State Agencies Federal EOCs Federal Agencies 911 call THREAT (CHEMICAL WMD) Once the Federal Government WMD “system” is activated, the command control and “ownership” problems escalate, as do the information sharing problems. Feds tend to take over and use their own C2 protocol; locals won’t want to give up information that weakens local control. Information “rightiousness” and access control becomes big issue. Coordination can deteriorate. Even when all this is solved, interoperable information formats are still problematic!! Federal Teams usually have their own command-control structure, which is likely different from ICS telco

17 Modeling The BIG PICTURE for Emergency Management Response Teams/Cmd 911 Operations C4I C5I Response Teams/Cmd Municipal Agencies Concerned Public, Officials, and Media Government Infrastructure Local Care Facilities Emergency Management Response / Aid On-Site Response Team Victims & Worried Well Incident Scene 911 call 911 CAD Unified Cmd - Natural Disasters, Technological Disasters, Emerging Infectious Diseases, WMD Terrorism-  Chemical  Nuclear  Energy  Transportation Response Teams/Cmd INDUSTRY Industrial EOCs County EOC County Agencies State EOC State Agencies Federal EOCs Federal Agencies GDIN/NDIN Int’l Agencies C4I Industry Management 911 call THREAT C4I + Information Coordination = C5I telco

18 Features of XII Information Interoperability Model State EOCs Government EOCs Industry EOCs Local EOCs (911) Government Agencies State Agencies Local Agencies International Agencies GDIN/NDIN EOCs First Response - Local - Private Second Response - Mutual Aid - State, NG Third Response - Federal All Hazards Threat -including extreme events Incident Command - ICS (offsite-onsite) - Special Commands - Unified Command Incident events, response situations, and victim’s needs Interoperability Network Links and Information Protocols - Special purpose - Public/Private - State & Local - Federal - Civil & DoD Public/Media Inherited Response -Hospitals -Care centers -Morgues On-Scene Incident data collection and derived information (All items interrelated to Scenario event flow and timeline) C2 Hierarchy and Data Ownership Chain Response Teams Technologies - Hazmat - SAR - Medical - Biological/Chemical - Radiological - Explosives - Fire - Law Enforcement

19 Extreme Information Infrastructure (XII) The XII is an information infrastructure OVERLAY that allows cooperative interchange of information between all the different emergency management and response players from top to bottom and from side to side -- facilitating the exchange of the right information at the right time in the right place  Network connectivity is only a foundation  nodes and links provide connectivity and accessibility, thruput capacity  networked services provide security, reliability, graceful degradation, information delivery confirmation, data archiving  Common message formatting necessary to facilitate information interchange  In absence of common formatting, information translators can be used  Creation of common, shared, incident knowledge base is dependent upon data-fusion activity  Intelligent Information search-agents are required to acquire data for data fusion  Information ownership, access controls, data rightiousness are totally separate issues

20 XII Interoperability Model Across Incident Lifecycle Timeline Initial Event Off-Site Medical Care Expanded Responses Reconstitution Resolution First Response On-Site Medical Care Planning, Preparation, Training, Exercise Basic Incident Types - E-911 - Hazmat - Expanded E-911 - Mutual Aid - Natural Disaster - Explosives Terrorism - Chemical Terrorism - Biological Terrorism - Emerging Infectious Disease - Radiological Terrorism - Nuclear Terrorism Incident Lifecycle Timeline XII Information Interoperability Model across Incident Lifecycle - To facilitate the exchange of the right information, at the right time, in the right place... - Which requires knowing what information is needed, when, and where, and why... - Which requires and information model across events, time, organizations, and users... Why Do We Need and Information Model?

21 XII Interoperability Translator Example Initial Event Off-Site Medical Care Expanded Responses Reconstitution Resolution First Response On-Site Medical Care Planning, Preparation, Training, Exercise Incident Lifecycle Timeline XII Information Interoperability Model across Incident Lifecycle A very simple example of the use of an XII information translator is when a Federal Response Team arrives on site for assistance and needs to use some detailed GIS mapping information. The local GIS detailed maps prepared by and owned State or Municipality resources may be in a format different than that used by the Federal Team. A translator is needed so the Federal Team can use the local detailed maps, and then add and share incident specific knowledge with other incident participants. XII Information Translator Example for GIS

22 Net-Centric View of the “XII System” Network Links Translators Emergency Management Network Response Teams/Cmd Response Teams/Cmd Municipal Agencies Onsite Care Facilities 911 call Unified Cmd  Chemical  Nuclear  Energy  Transportation Response Teams/Cmd INDUSTRY Industrial EOCs County EOC County Agencies State EOC State Agencies Federal EOCs Federal Agencies GDIN/NDIN Int’l Agencies Exercise Control Scenario Injectors Middleware Services Translator Source Data Fusion Engine Info Translator master  Federal Facilities  State / Regional Facilities  Public Health  Clinics  Local Hospitals MEDICAL COMMUNITY Response Teams/Cmd 911 Operations

23 Summary of XII Net-Centric Requirements - Requires compatible network links and protocols 1) Communications Interconnect Accessibility - Requires access privilege (includes need-to-know), identity verification, common directory, intelligent search agents (these require knowledge to work well), and data interoperability 2) Data Accessibility - Requires compatible data exchange formats or translators 3) Data Interoperability - Requires common data context, which means common information formats or templates, and common glossary 4) Information Sharing - Requires that all event, time, and space relationships between information parcels be referred to a common operational model having end-to-end, top-to-bottom, side-to-side, and front-to-back interactions defined with common symbology, glossary, format. 5) Knowledge Sharing Five Key Requirements for Emergency-Incident Knowledge Exchange

24 Why is the XII Model Needed? The XII Information Model is can help understand what kinds of information are needed at what places and what times for what purpose, in order to build a “smart” directory and knowledge agents for decision support, and to define the common incident “picture” components and format. It can also be used to track the evolution of command protocol as the situation progresses from strictly local to national catastrophic medical disaster. It can be used to establish a foundation for modeling and simulation work, leading to capabilities for a national simulation capability for catastrophic medical emergencies.


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